China Railway Construction (Caribbean) Company Limited resumed working on the $1.2 billion Crown Point International Airport expansion project yesterday, as Government gave the go-ahead for all construction works to reopen.
The State had closed all construction projects in May this year to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
According to National Infrastructure Development Company Limited’s chairman Herbert George, although the closure slowed the physical construction phase of the project, work continued on its design.
He said the project’s contractors will make up lost time. The airport project is expected to take two years to complete.
“Production on-site would have been affected. However, its a design/build project, the design would have continued. We will, as far as possible, be making up for a lost time,” he told Guardian Media.
Asked about payment to residents from Block D, who remain on the site, George said they will be compensated as soon as the paperwork is complete.
“Block D people would be paid. The Government has the money to pay them. Their properties have to be redefined and re-evaluated. We had some estimates for that block but realised that in some cases, compensation is inadequate,” he said.
In November 2020, the Government said it had compensated 80 property owners to the tune of $128 million.
The compensation covers 19.7 acres of the 53-acre parcel of land required to build a terminal, seven commercial, 15 residential and five mixed (home and business) properties, the Government said.
Land Acquisition Consultant ACQ and Associates is acting on behalf of the Government to execute the legal agreements and payments to property owners, the State said.
Property owners have the option to relocate to State-owned property at Shirvan Road and Cove Estate.